When executives and leaders are evaluating a clinical documentation platform — whether that’s an electronic patient care reporting system, an admission management system, or a broader case management platform — there are a few key components that really need to be considered. Get these right and the platform will serve the organisation well. Miss them and you’ll find yourself with a system that looks good in a demo and creates friction in the field.
One: Where Is the Data Being Stored?
This is the most important question — and it’s the one that gets asked least often. Where is the data being stored? Where is it being kept? And is it aligned to the requirements and obligations you hold when handling patient data?
Patient data is the most sensitive and most carefully considered data we need to protect. The regulatory and legal obligations around how it’s handled aren’t minor. Before committing to any platform, you need to know exactly where that data lives, who has access to it, and whether that arrangement satisfies the requirements your organisation is subject to.
Two: How Does It Align to Your Existing Processes?
You’re in business because your systems work. The question isn’t whether a new platform can replace everything you do — it’s whether it can fit over the top of what you’re already doing and enhance it.
That means understanding your current process clearly, and making sure the solution you choose can sit over those processes and take them to the next level. Not ask you to rebuild them from scratch, and not ask your team to document their work in a way that doesn’t match how they actually deliver care.
Three: Is It Configurable to Your Needs?
This is about aligning to your specific process flows. Making sure that in the environment and the space where you’re delivering your service, all the boxes can be ticked, all the questions can be answered, and all of it can be documented.
A platform that offers configurability in theory but locks you into standard workflows in practice doesn’t give you what you need. The configurability needs to be real — adjustable to your service delivery model, not just cosmetically flexible.
Four: Is It Yours?
This one matters more than it might seem. It’s about making sure the platform is branded to you — that it looks like your organisation and makes you look the best you can to the clients you’re servicing and delivering for.
Documentation that goes out to insurers, to receiving facilities, to partner organisations — it represents you. A platform that reflects your brand and your standard of professionalism is a different thing to a generic white-label form.
Those four components — data storage, process alignment, configurability, and brand ownership — are what make the difference between a platform that serves you and one you work around. Book a demo with the Chronosoft team to see how Medstat addresses each of them for your operation.